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Difference between revisions of "Sonic 2 Hacking Guide"

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'''Sonic 2 Hacking Guide''' was the name given to the first ROM hacking documentation released to the internet for a Sonic game. The document was created by [[User:Saxman|saxman]] in late 1998. It was directly inspired by information released by [[User:Tom41|Tom Sonic]] detailing how to access [[Hidden Palace Zone]] through [[savestate]] modifications. A draft was written on 8.5 x 11-inch printer paper and mailed to [[SSNTails]]. When saxman got his own computer for Christmas the same year, it was typed up in a text file and submitted to [[Simon Wai]] to be offered as a download on his website. When [[User:NO CARRIER|Andy Wolan]] offered saxman hosting at [[SSRG]], saxman created an HTML version of the guide. The guide broke down many barriers, including being the first source to document how to modify levels, music, various game configuration settings, and demo sequences, among other things.
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'''Sonic 2 Hacking Guide''' was the name given to the first ROM hacking documentation released to the internet for a Sonic game. The document was created by [[User:Saxman|Saxman]] in December of 1998. It was directly inspired by information released by [[User:Tom41|Tom Sonic]] detailing how to access [[Hidden Palace Zone]] through [[savestate]] modifications. A draft was written on 8.5 x 11-inch printer paper and mailed to [[SSNTails]]. When Saxman got his own computer for Christmas the same year, it was typed up in a text file and submitted to several websites, including [[Simon Wai's Sonic 2 Beta Page]] to be offered as a download.
  
The guide hasn't been updated since 2004. However, its impact and influence has lived on with many ROM editing tools directly based on information in the Sonic 2 Hacking Guide, including [[SLEEP]], [[SonED]], and [[Sonic HackingWiz Pro]] to name a few. A copy can be found on the [[Hacking CulT]] server [http://www.hacking-cult.org/s2hack/ here].
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On February 14, 1999, [[User:NO CARRIER|Andy Wolan]] made an offer to Saxman to host his work at the [[Sonic Stuff Research Group]]. Upon acceptance, Saxman created an HTML version of the guide which went live just three days later.
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The guide broke down many barriers, including being the first source to document how to modify levels, music, various game configuration settings, and demo sequences, among other things.
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The guide hasn't been updated since June of 2004. However, its impact and influence has lived on with many ROM editing tools directly based on information in the Sonic 2 Hacking Guide, including [[SLEEP]], [[SonED]], and [[Sonic HackingWiz Pro]] to name a few. A copy can be found on the [[Hacking CulT]] server [http://www.hacking-cult.org/s2hack/ here].
  
 
===Downloads===
 
===Downloads===
 
* {{file|S2-Hack-Origins.zip|First Sonic 2 hacks for the Sonic 2 Hacking Guide}}
 
* {{file|S2-Hack-Origins.zip|First Sonic 2 hacks for the Sonic 2 Hacking Guide}}

Latest revision as of 19:39, 18 July 2023

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Sonic 2 Hacking Guide was the name given to the first ROM hacking documentation released to the internet for a Sonic game. The document was created by Saxman in December of 1998. It was directly inspired by information released by Tom Sonic detailing how to access Hidden Palace Zone through savestate modifications. A draft was written on 8.5 x 11-inch printer paper and mailed to SSNTails. When Saxman got his own computer for Christmas the same year, it was typed up in a text file and submitted to several websites, including Simon Wai's Sonic 2 Beta Page to be offered as a download.

On February 14, 1999, Andy Wolan made an offer to Saxman to host his work at the Sonic Stuff Research Group. Upon acceptance, Saxman created an HTML version of the guide which went live just three days later.

The guide broke down many barriers, including being the first source to document how to modify levels, music, various game configuration settings, and demo sequences, among other things.

The guide hasn't been updated since June of 2004. However, its impact and influence has lived on with many ROM editing tools directly based on information in the Sonic 2 Hacking Guide, including SLEEP, SonED, and Sonic HackingWiz Pro to name a few. A copy can be found on the Hacking CulT server here.

Downloads